Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are all the same thing - how does each of you handle disappointment, conflict, anger, etc. the exact nature of the the thing causing the feeling doesn’t matter.
NP. I agree with this. But I would curious on whether I displayed characteristics that made him wonder if I couldn’t handle life’s challenges. Not to convince him or to try and marry him, but I do think it’s good to know when you might be a red flag.
You seem like an empath OP, so you will be fine. You work through things and are considerate of others. You think and do. Not run away.
You’re an empath or the dcum troll. This seems like a regurgitated post flipped about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Red Flag 🚩
He doesn't want to marry you.
I tend to lean in this direction.
Just my own experience, but I had a BF stall with these same concerns. He dragged it out for years before finally admitting he didn’t want to get married at all. It was very messy.
Plus, 1+ years seems pretty late to start having the marriage conversation. I bring it up by 6 months (I’m 40, so I’m not wasting a year of my life on someone who isn’t sure). The last time I did this at 6 months, despite him being a great BF and loving me, he hemmed and hawed and started talking about how it would be years before we’d be ready for marriage and potentially a child together. Years? Playa, I’m 40, I’m not waiting years.
I’d start having those difficult conversations sooner rather than later. Don’t be like me and waste 5 years of your life waiting for a guy to be ready, just for him to dump you.
I would have dumped anyone who tried to have these conversations at the three month mark, let alone third date. I don't even know if I want your genitals anywhere near mine, I'm not discussing child-rearing and end of life decisions!
This. I was on 3 month plans before I even turned 30. These are not issues that you shouldn’t have answers to a year into the relationship. Some of these are 3rd date filtering questions.
I think people are spending a lot of time trying to secure so much up front before marriage, before kids, that they are practically middle aged before committing to anything. And then, the marriage ceremony functions as a coronation.
You need a solid foundation, yes, before marriage, but that is just the love and respect part. The rest, using that love and respect is used to figure out the rest. Sort out the top 5 deal breakers, which you likely already have it seems, and the rest will be figured out together because supposedly you trust each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He sounds like a loser.
This is how you end up with a husband who refuses to engage in any emotional intimacy.
OP’s BF sounds like a smart guy. They’ve only been dating a year, not 5. A man who is willing to think through these realities is wise. Maybe he’s had some talks with long-married people and he’s learning from them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are all the same thing - how does each of you handle disappointment, conflict, anger, etc. the exact nature of the the thing causing the feeling doesn’t matter.
NP. I agree with this. But I would curious on whether I displayed characteristics that made him wonder if I couldn’t handle life’s challenges. Not to convince him or to try and marry him, but I do think it’s good to know when you might be a red flag.
Anonymous wrote:They are all the same thing - how does each of you handle disappointment, conflict, anger, etc. the exact nature of the the thing causing the feeling doesn’t matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been dating for a year and a couple of months. Both around 30. Neither of us has been married or engaged. I did live with a guy for two years, he has never lived with a woman, and we have our own places.
We were having a conversation and marriage came him. So he said that yes, he has been thinking about it. Then he said that when it comes to having fun, serious talks, physical attraction, sexual chemistry, and love, all is fine. But his concern is if we can make it with the things that really test a marriage - unemployment, disciplining kids, in law issues, etc.
How do I address this? Obviously with no kids we can't test childrearing philosophies. Or is he just stalling? How does a gap get bridged with hypotheticals? He has a point in that I have seen couples who seemed to have it all get divorced, but marriage is a risk no matter how you plan.
You ask what his philosophies on each are and conduct a behavioral assessment. Add shared housework and you will know if this will really work or if you need to cut and run. 1 year is a long time at 30.